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Local Guidelines for Implementing the <br />California Environmental Quality Act (2023) NEGATIVE DECLARATION <br /> <br /> <br />2023 City of Santa Ana Local Guidelines 6-17 ©Best Best & Krieger LLP <br />The City must also post the Notice of Determination on its website. Such electronic notice <br />is in addition to the posting requirements of the State CEQA Guidelines and the Public Resources <br />Code. The Clerk must post the Notice of Determination within twenty-four (24) hours of receipt. <br />The Notice must be posted in the office of the Clerk for a minimum of thirty (30) days. Thereafter, <br />the Clerk shall return the notice to the City with a notation of the period it was posted. The City <br />shall retain the notice for not less than twelve (12) months. If the project requires discretionary <br />approval from any State agency, the Notice of Determination shall also be filed with OPR within <br />five (5) working days of project approval along with proof of payment of the DFW fee or a no <br />effect determination form from the DFW (see Local Guidelines Section 6.24). Simultaneously <br />with the filing of the Notice of Determination with the Clerk, Staff shall cause a copy of the Notice <br />of Determination to be posted at City Offices. <br />If a written request has been made for a copy of the Notice of Determination prior to the <br />date on which the City adopts the Negative Declaration or Mitigated Negative Declaration, the <br />copy must be mailed, first class postage prepaid, within five (5) days of the City’s determination. <br />If such a request is made following the City’s determination, then the copy should be mailed in the <br />same manner as soon as possible. The recipients of such documents may be charged a fee <br />reasonably related to the cost of providing the service. <br />For projects with more than one phase, Staff shall file a Notice of Determination for each <br />phase requiring a discretionary approval. <br />The filing and posting of the Notice of Determination with the County Clerk, and, if <br />necessary, with OPR, usually starts a thirty (30) day statute of limitations on court challenges to <br />the approval under CEQA. When separate notices are filed for successive phases of the same <br />overall project, the thirty (30) day statute of limitations to challenge the subsequent phase begins <br />to run when the second notice is filed. Failure to file the Notice may result in a one hundred eighty <br />(180) day statute of limitations. <br />(Reference: State CEQA Guidelines, § 15075.) <br />6.21 ADDENDUM TO NEGATIVE DECLARATION OR MITIGATED NEGATIVE DECLARATION. <br />The City may prepare an addendum to an adopted Negative Declaration or Mitigated <br />Negative Declaration if only minor technical changes or additions are necessary. The City may <br />also prepare an addendum to an adopted Negative Declaration or Mitigated Negative Declaration <br />when none of the conditions calling for a subsequent Negative Declaration or Mitigated Negative <br />Declaration have occurred. (See Local Guidelines Section 6.22 below.) An addendum need not <br />be circulated for public review but can be attached to the adopted Negative Declaration or <br />Mitigated Negative Declaration. The City shall consider the addendum with the adopted Negative <br />Declaration or Mitigated Negative Declaration prior to project approval. <br />(Reference: State CEQA Guidelines, § 15164.) <br />6.22 SUBSEQUENT NEGATIVE DECLARATION OR MITIGATED NEGATIVE DECLARATION. <br />When a Negative Declaration or Mitigated Negative Declaration has been adopted for a <br />project, or when an EIR has been certified, no subsequent Negative Declaration, Mitigated